skip to main content (press enter)
 

CBC Global Header Navigation

 
CBCnews

Iraqis in Canada vote in Iraq election

Last Updated: Tuesday, March 9, 2010 | 12:52 PM ET

Iraqis lined up to vote Saturday at a temporary election office in Ottawa's south end.Iraqis lined up to vote Saturday at a temporary election office in Ottawa's south end. (CBC)

The results of parliamentary elections in Iraq will be released within days, and more than 1,000 Iraqis living in the Ottawa-Gatineau area contributed their votes over the weekend.

Across Canada, more than 12,000 Iraqis had their say in the future of the young democracy.

Among the Ottawa-area voters was Hakim Habib, who fled Iraq in 1983. Monday, he proudly held up his ink-stained finger — proof he had participated in his homeland's election.

"We lived our life a rough life because of Saddam's regime. But now, thank God, it's different. We're getting to the better part of it," Habib said.

Across Canada, the turnout was 40 per cent higher than in the 2005 Iraqi general election.

There were more polling stations this time, which helped. But so did the opportunity to vote for individual candidates, instead of just political parties.

In Baghdad, 62 per cent of voters went to the polls, in spite of several bombing attacks.

That is an encouraging sign, according to Brad Pye, who was an election observer in Iraq in 2005.

"Having an election that's relatively violence-free, where men and women are able to get to the ballot box, speaks volumes about what kind of future the Iraqis are looking for," Pye said.

"It's a future Iraqis hope is decided by votes, not by violence."

  •  
 

Video

    Related

    Ottawa Headlines

    Ont. terror suspect gets bail hearing date
    A bail hearing for a London, Ont., doctor and former contestant on Canadian Idol charged in connection with an alleged terrorism plot has been set for the end of September.
    Douglas Coupland designs firefighters monument
    A design from Douglas Coupland and a Toronto architecture firm has been selected for a national monument in Ottawa to Canadian firefighters who died in the line of duty.
    McGuinty: Extend extra EI benefits
    Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty says it is a "mistake" for the federal government to cancel an extra five weeks of employment insurance benefits.
    Gay Ont. man loses blood donation negligence suit Video
    A gay Toronto man who concealed his sexual history on a blood donor form and was sued for negligence by Canadian Blood Services has lost in Ontario Superior Court.
    84-year-old man found in good health
    An 84-year-old man who police said went missing Wednesday morning has been found.

    Canada Headlines

    Afghan prisons 'not torture chambers': officer
    A senior Canadian military officer who helped manage the early days of Canada's combat mission in Kandahar has admitted torture likely occurred in Afghan prisons, but says reports of abuse were overblown.
    Dawson shooting spurred mental disorder spike Video
    A groundbreaking study on fallout of the 2006 shooting at Montreal's Dawson College reveals that nearly one-third of students and staff suffered from psychological trauma in the years after the event.
    Gay Ont. man loses blood donation negligence suit Video
    A gay Toronto man who concealed his sexual history on a blood donor form and was sued for negligence by Canadian Blood Services has lost in Ontario Superior Court.
    Reyat perjury trial begins in Vancouver
    The perjury trial of Inderjit Singh Reyat got underway in B.C. Supreme Court on Thursday morning, with prosecutor Len Doust outlining his opening arguments.
    Cyber predator must undergo psych exam
    A West Island man who pleaded guilty to luring at least 25 women and girls over the internet has been ordered to undergo a psychiatric examination.

    People who read this also read …

    Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

    Headlines

    Florida pastor cancels Qur'an burning Video
    Terry Jones, head of the Dove World Outreach Center of Gainesville, Fla., says after praying on the issue, he is calling off his plan to burn Qur'ans on Saturday.
    EI premiums will rise: Flaherty
    A freeze on employment insurance premiums that has been in effect for two years will end in the coming budget, which means premiums will soon rise, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty says.
    Gay Ont. man loses blood donation negligence suit Video
    A gay Toronto man who concealed his sexual history on a blood donor form and was sued for negligence by Canadian Blood Services has lost in Ontario Superior Court.
    Afghan prisons 'not torture chambers': officer
    A senior Canadian military officer who helped manage the early days of Canada's combat mission in Kandahar has admitted torture likely occurred in Afghan prisons, but says reports of abuse were overblown.
    Reyat perjury trial begins in Vancouver
    The perjury trial of Inderjit Singh Reyat got underway in B.C. Supreme Court on Thursday morning, with prosecutor Len Doust outlining his opening arguments.